The comment shortcut is CTRL+R on Windows and CTRL+/ on Unix systems (not sure about OS X). To comment multiple lines you'd have to highlight them using the mouse or SHIFT. In any case this can be customized via Preferences -> Keyboard -> Shortcuts....

Calling statset with an output argument (as you do at the start of your question) gives you a structure of Statistics Toolbox options that you can pass in to functions such as factoran. If you display the structure, you'll see that it always contains a field for each of the...

Here is one idea to create the Left field. You could try to adapt it to create the other fields as well: myStruct.Left = cell2struct(repmat({repmat(struct('x', [], 'y', [], 'z', []), 3, 1)}, 18, 1), num2cell('A':'R'), 1); ...

The following should solve the problem, although there's a nicer way to do it using logical indexing (I think) but I can't recall it off the top of my head: for t = 1 : int_ccy; wgts(t,:) = sum(weight .* (country_code == ccy(t, 1)), 1); end ...

The problem you are experiencing comes from saving the data to a MATLAB data file, renaming the file with a .jpg extension and trying to use imread to read in the data. This unfortunately doesn't work. You can't change the file type of your data from .mat to .jpg. All...

You can use calllib to call functions in shared library. This would be the newlib.h #ifdef __cplusplus extern "C"{ #endif void *init(int device); #ifdef __cplusplus } #endif and this would be the newlib.cpp file #include "newlib.h" #include "yourlib.h" A *p; extern "C" void *init(int device) { p = new A;...

I've written a small function (which might be further improved) to test the "happines" of a number. Current version only works with scalar and one dim. array. Input: the scalar or array to be tested Output: 1) an index: happy (1) unhappy(0) 2) the list of happy number within the...

It is not clear what you want to do exactly and why you need an abstract class then a derived one, but assuming you really need all that for more purpose than you described, take the following into account: By definition in OOP, an abstract class cannot be instantiated. It...

Java components that are generated from MATLAB code using deploytool (or using other functionality from MATLAB deployment products such as MATLAB Compiler, MATLAB Builder etc.) depend on the MATLAB Compiler Runtime (MCR). The MCR has much too large a footprint to run on an Android device, and it's really not...

First, you have to know that fitcknn & ClassificationKNN.fit will end up with the same result. The difference is that fitcknn is a more recent version, so it allows more options. As an example, if you use load fisheriris; X = meas; Y = species; Then this code will work...

You can extract the numerator and denominator with numden, then get their coefficiens with coeffs, normalize the polynomials, and divide again. [n,d] = numden(T); cn = coeffs(n); cd = coeffs(d); T = (n/cn(end))/(d/cd(end)); The output of latex(T) (note: no simplifyFraction now; it would undo things): Of course this isn't equal...

Would it suffice to change the 3rd line of your script to if start(i+1)<max(finish(1:i)) Using your second set of example data, I get the following output: 2900-2996: Tandem 5010-5789: Divergent 6126-7604: Convergent This is what you wanted? Balle...

In increasing order of generality: If the second column is always cyclical: reshape and sum: result = sum(reshape(A(:,1), m, []), 2); If the second column consists of integers: use accumarray: result = accumarray(A(:,2), A(:,1)); In the most general case, you need unique before accumarray: [~, ~, u] = unique(A(:,2)); result...

The "weird behavior and lag" you see is almost always a result of callbacks interrupting each other's execution, and repeated unnecessary executions of the same callbacks piling up. To avoid this, you can typically set the Interruptible property of the control/component to 'off' instead of the default 'on', and set...

Here is a way to do it. The code is commented. I created a dummy movie but if you have one you can skip the first few steps, as indicated. The trick is to use hold on and drawnow to refresh the display correctly. You can add more lines or...

Implement own rotation functionality You can implement an own functionality to adjust the axes and the lights at the same time. This way the light gets adjusted continuously while rotating the axes. function follow_me_1 figure axes('buttondownfcn', @buttondownfcn); % assign callback set(gca,'NextPlot','add'); % add next plot to current axis surf(peaks,'hittest','off'); %...

Here is an alternative using annotation objects and the textarrow option, which displays text along with an arrow. This could be useful to you to point in narrow regions where text would hide data. For example: clear clc close all x = 1:128; %// Plot data figure hAxes1 = axes('Position',[.1...

The simplest way is to iterate through your values in a for loop adding them to an accumulator variable. The twist in this case - excluding the entries where i==j - would be to use an if statement. innersum = 0; % initialise it first for j = 1:p if...

You might have a loop going through the "b"cellarray containing the "filenames" and: 1)get the filename by converting the content of the i-th to a string by using "char" function 2)call "save" specifying the filename (see previous point) and the list of scalar you want to save in it (in...

The two segments of code you specifically mention are both housekeeping: it's more about the compsci of it than the optics. So the first line y = y/max(y); is normalising it to 1, i.e. dividing the whole series through by the maximum value. This is a fairly common practice and...

The ratio can be interpreted as deterministic (you want 500 ones and 500 zeros in each realization of 1000 values) or as probabilistic (a realization may have more ones than zeros, but the ratio holds over a very large number of realizations). Your code works for the probabilistic interpretation, so...

Your test variable is a three-dimensional variable, so when you do test2 = test(:,1); and then test2(:) <VaR_Calib_EVT/100 it's not the same as in your second example when you do test(:,i)<(VaR_Calib_EVT(:,i)/100) To replicate the results of your first example you could explicitly do the test2 assignment inside the loop, which...

From the Matlab forums, the dir command output sorting is not specified, but it seems to be purely alphabetical order (with purely I mean that it does not take into account sorter filenames first). Therefore, you would have to manually sort the names. The following code is taken from this...

I assume with "2d-line" you mean a 2d-plot. This is done by the plot-function, so there is no need of surf or mesh. Sorry, when I got you wrong. The following code does what I think you asked for: % Generate some propagating wave n = 20; t = linspace(0,10,100);...

You have a couple alternatives here. Be aware that callbacks expect 2 input arguments by default so your problem most likely comes from that. I can't find the reference I once saw about this, but you might want to try one of these: 1) In your callback, manually retrieve the...

You would need to change your back slashes \ to forward slashes /, otherwise some \ followed by a letter may be commands in the sprintffunction, like for example \N or \a. See sprintf documentation in the formatSpecarea for more information. original_image=imread(sprintf('D:/Academics/New folder/CUB_200_2011/images/%s', C{1}{2*(image_count)})); ...

When converting from a full representation of a symmetric matrix to a sparse representation, you will need to scan all the elements on the main diagonal and above (or symmetrically on the main diagonal and below). For an (n x n) matrix matrix this is (n^2+n)/2 entries that need to...

TL;DL: net.trainParam.max_fail = 8; I've used the example provided in the page you linked to get a working instance of nntraintool. When you open nntraintool.m you see a small piece of documentation that says (among else): % net.<a href="matlab:doc nnproperty.net_trainParam">trainParam</a>.<a href="matlab:doc nnparam.showWindow">showWindow</a> = false; This hinted that some properties are...

As suggested in the comments, the error is because x is of dimension 3x2 and theta of dimension 1x2, so you can't do X*theta. I suspect you want: theta = [0;1]; % note the ; instead of , % theta is now of dimension 2x1 % X*theta is now a...

In the meanSum line, you should write A(k:k+2^n-1) You want to access the elements ranging from k to k+2^n-1. Therefore you have to provide the range to the selection operation. A few suggestions: Use a search engine or a knowlegde base to gather information on the error message you received....

In Matlab, you can plot something using plot(xArray, yArray);. If you want to shift the plot along the x axis, you could use plot(xArray + amountToShift, yArray);. As I believe shifting is not what your real problem is, I've added an example where data gets plotted in the way you...

You should be able to use properties s = 100; d = zeros(1,100); end right? If you already have the 100 as a default for s, you should also be able to provide this as part of the default for d. I'm guessing that you're trying to avoid doing that...

My bet is that trf is a very large matrix. In these cases, the surface has so many edges (coloured black by default) that they completely clutter the image, and you don't see the surface patches One solution for that is to remove the edges: surf(trf, 'edgecolor', 'none'). Example: with...

I have the answer to my question. A summary of changes: Added uiresume (after adding uiwait in the Opening function) after each Callback Deleted close (gcf) after each Callback; if the figure closes, then hObject and handles in guidata are no longer accessible to the Output function Created a handle...

The following code implements only a part of what I can see in the description. It generates the noise processes and does what is described in the first part. The autocorrelation is not calculated with the filter coefficients but with the actual signal. % generate noise process y y =...

In order to use ax(n) you need to provide plotyy with the right output arguments. In your case, you could use the following: figure; %// Here BarPlot and RegPlot are not really needed so you could replace them with ~. [ax,BarPlot,RegPlot] = plotyy(Pert, Rfootvel(:,i+1), Pert, 0,'bar','plot'); hold(ax(1), 'on'); legend('Pert 1-8',...

The saved MATLAB-object (default name is fittedmodel) contains the fitted function as a function-handle and the fitted coefficients corresponding to this function-handle. You can then evaluate at the data points of your choice with feval. In the following example the fitted function will be evaluated at the original datapoints x:...

Generally this is done (if the eq is in the format you have) with an Ax=b system. Let me show you how to do it with a simple example of 2 eq with 2 unknowns. 3*l1-4*l2=3 5*l1 -3*l2=-4 You can build the system as: x (unknowns) will be a unknowns...

You can use the bitdepth parameter to set that. imwrite(img,'myimg.png','bitdepth',16) Of course, not all image formats support all bitdepths, so make sure you are choosing the the right format for your data....

See the docs for bar. You can reshape info to 2xN (instead of its current shape 1x2N) and then use a single bar command to plot the 2 series, and it will take care of the spacing. See this image from the docs: If you want to keep doing it...

Using repelem and mat2cell lens = cellfun(@numel, A); out = mat2cell(repelem(B,lens).*ones(1,sum(lens)),1,lens) Note: cellfun is looping in disguise. But, here cellfun is used to find the number of elements alone. So this could be considered almost vectorised :P repelem function is introduced in R2015a. You may not be able to run...

Read only when data present You can read out the BytesAvailable-property of the serial object s to know how many bytes are in the buffer ready to be read: bytes = get(s,'BytesAvailable'); % using getter-function bytes = s.BytesAvailable; % using object-oriented-addressing Then you can check the value of bytes to...

The documentation: http://www.mathworks.com/help/matlab/ref/load.html, shows that you can supply a string to load by doing: load(filename) where filename is a string. In your case, you can do: load(['sourceETA/Record1/result',num2str(n),'.txt']) ...

If you simply want to ignore the columns/rows that lie outside full sub-blocks, you just subtract the width/height of the sub-block from the corresponding loop ranges: overlap = 4 blockWidth = 8; blockHeight = 8; count = 1; for i = 1:overlap:size(img,1) - blockHeight + 1 for j = 1:overlap:size(img,2)...

So you want to remove rows of A that contain at least t zeros in sequence. How about a single line? B = A(~any(conv2(1,ones(1,t),2*A-1,'valid')==-t, 2),:); How this works: Transform A to bipolar form (2*A-1) Convolve each row with a sequence of t ones (conv2(...)) Keep only rows for which the...

It's very simple. I actually wouldn't use the code above and use the image processing toolbox instead. There's a built-in function to remove any white pixels that touch the border of the image. Use the imclearborder function. The function will return a new binary image where any pixels that were...

As discussed in the comment, the way Matlab handles legends is different than in earlier releases; they are now legend objects. In any case, to solve your problem, which is a dimension mismatch problem, you can simply concatenate vertically the outputs you get using the transpose operator, because Matlab returns...

You can read the file using: >> open classreg.regr.modelutils.tstats This will open "tstats.m". The path of that file on your drive can be a acccessed using: >> which classreg.regr.modelutils.tstats In this folder there are all the other m-files which belong to this class....

Use w+ or r+ when using fopen, depending on what you want to do with the file and whethe you want to create it or simply open it. From (http://www.tutorialspoint.com/c_standard_library/c_function_fopen.htm) "r" Opens a file for reading. The file must exist. "w" Creates an empty file for writing. If a file...

you can also test existence of the file using exist n=202; for idx = 0:n infilename = sprintf('pt%d.txt',idx); outname = sprintf('out%d.txt',idx); if exist( infilename , 'file') == 2 do your stuff end end ...

For every (i, j) pair (there are n^2 in total), you reach the inner part of the loop where you find the similarity and then conditionally add elements to your sparse matrix. Finding the similarity takes "d" operations (because you need to loop through each of your dimensions) and conditionally...

The strings defined in the legend command are assigned in order of the plots being generated. This means that your first string 'signal1' is assigned to the plot for signal1 and the second string 'signal2' is assigned to the vertical line. You have two possibilities to fix this problem. Execute...

I think you are looking for "path planning" rather than clustering. The traveling salesman problem comes to mind If you want to use clustering to find the individual regions you should find the coordinates for each location with respect to some global frame. One example would be using Latitude and...

Use unique with the 'stable'option: str = 'FDFACCFFFBDCGGHBBCFGE'; result = unique(str, 'stable'); If you want something more manual: use bsxfun to build a logical index of the elements that haven't appeared (~any(...)) before (triu(..., 1)): result = str(~any(triu(bsxfun(@eq, str, str.'), 1))); ...

First of all, you should not use the same letter for a bunch of things; your code is pretty hard to read because one has to figure out what T means at every instance. Second, pure math helps: after a change of variables and simple computation, the double integral becomes...

As noted in the comments, this is fairly easy to do: N = numel(X); Xlines = zeros(2*N,1); Ylines = zeros(2*N,1); Xlines(1:2:end) = X(:); Ylines(1:2:end) = Y(:); plot(Xlines, Ylines, '-'); This constructs the vectors Xlines and Ylines by interleaving them with the point (0,0), which looks exactly like what you want....

I think it is easiest to first think about this in terms of statistics. What I think you are really saying is that you want to calculate the 100*(1-m/nth) percentile, that is the number such that the value is below it 1-m/nth of the time, where m is your sampling...

You can change the XTickLabels property using your own format: set(gca,'XTickLabels',sprintfc('1e%i',0:numel(xt)-1)) where sprintfc is an undocumented function creating cell arrays filled with custom strings and xt is the XTick you have fetched from the current axis in order to know how many of them there are. Example with dummy data:...

Not the fastest way, but you could do it as follows: Saving the desired variables in a temporary file Loading that file to get all those variables in a struct array Converting that struct array to a cell array That is, save temp_file -regexp data\d+ %// step 1 allData =...

Matlab does have function handles which can be passed to other functions. As one example, the function fzero will find the zero-crossing of the function you give as its first argument. Function handles can be stored in variables, cell-arrays or structs. Matlab also has anonymous functions, which are similar to...

If you want to get the matrices to be displayed in each column, that's going to be ugly. If I'm interpreting your request correctly, you are concatenating row vectors so that they appear as a single row. That's gonna look pretty bad. What I would suggest you do is split...

Unless you have some implementation bug (test your code with synthetic, well separated data), the problem might lay in the class imbalance. This can be solved by adjusting the missclassification cost (See this discussion in CV). I'd use the cost parameter of fitcsvm to increase the missclassification cost of the...

The second loop does not index correctly for tau. You are defining indexing for tau as #define tau(a, b) tau[b+a*NrSensor] Let us walk through the second loop assuming NrSensor = 10 and len_zr = 5. For this case max value of loop variable i is 9 and max value of...

a=1e-2 b=1e-1 midway = exp((log(a)+log(b))/2) Take the log to get the positions in log scale, then do the math. You could simplify that formula and you will end up with a geometric mean: midway=sqrt(a*b) ...

I think this might do what you want. Just convert to Cartesian and separate into cell arrays. %Generate sample data theta = pi*rand(10, 1); r = 15*rand(size(theta)); %Make (x,y) coordinates x0 = r.*cos(theta); y0 = r.*sin(theta); %Convert to cell arrays, this is assuming a column vector, if it were a...

If I understand correctly, you are asking how to decide which distribution to choose once you have a few fits. There are three major metrics (IMO) for measuring "goodness-of-fit": Chi-Squared Kolmogrov-Smirnov Anderson-Darling Which to choose depends on a large number of factors; you can randomly pick one or read the...